Solar Energy, The Clean Tech Revolution, and Adopting Best Practices and Beyond

Solar Energy, The Clean Tech Revolution, and Adopting Best Practices and Beyond

Solar Energy, The Clean Tech Revolution, and Adopting Best Practices and Beyond

Small-scale experiments for best practices and beyond leads to national and global growth and development that’s renewable and sustainable; best and less carbon footprint and consumption of natural resources.

Me and my effective team is always thinking and doing small-scale experiments for best practices and beyond that’s sustainable and renewable.

On October 22, 1978, China’s leader Deng Xiaoping and 83 year old Founder Konosuke Matsushita of Japan’s Matsushita Electronic met in person in Japan for Meeting of the Minds and Adopting Best Practices and Beyond that’s sustainable and renewable. Both real men practiced real deal leadership.

Mr. Deny was the first Chinese official to visit Japan since the founding of the People’s Republic in 1949. It was symbolic that he made this one of his first foreign visits after assuming his new responsibilities.

It was of course not lost on Deng that Japan was having a very successful experience in rebuilding a war-ravaged country.

A closer relationship with a booming neighbor would help China in its own rebuilding through shared experience, trade, and economic development.

The last thirty years of an increasingly better relationship with Japan has vindicated Deng’s early judgment and first steps not only to open China up but to bury an old hatred, and build new relationships to enable China to join the world.

That’s what I call real leadership.

Why I cite them from the books Wu Xiaobo’s China Emerging and China’s Megatrends of John & Doris Naisbitt?

Because from the book The Undercover Economist of Tim Harford, China’s leader Deng Xiaoping initiated first small-scale experiments to rice/agricultural reforms that created the momentum to the rest of the economy. Those who had good ideas, good luck, and who worked hard prospered.

And Why I cite Japan?

Because Japanese from the book Japan: The Story of A Nation of Edwin O. Reischauer, foster the notable propensity for cooperation and consensus decision-making in small groups.

To be continued about this blog/article because I’m now somehow tired because of many factors and due diligence.